PAGE 4 A Thuinlay. February 14, 1863 HERALD AND NEWS, KUnuth Fall, Ore. New Assault MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks By United Pretw International Allied Chemical 444 Alum Co Am 46H American Air Lines Wk ' American Can 47 American Motors 224 American Standard -AT&T 122 American Tobacco 29 I Anaconda. Copper 46',i " Armco M'l Santa Fe 26H : Bendix Corp 57 Bethlehem Steel 3Y Boeing Air Mtt . Brunswick 18 Caterpillar Corp 36 Chrysler Corp 91 Coca Cola 9Vt . C.B.S. 49 Columbia Gas 27 Continental Can 45 Crown Zellerbach 47 Crucible Steel 19 Curtis Wright 20 .'Dow Chemical 58 '. Du Pont 242 '. Eastman Kodak llfi'-i " Firestone 35 : Ford 44 General Electric 78 General Foods 84 Genera Motors 63 General Portland Cement 18 Georgia Pacific 46 WALL STREET NEW YORK (UPD - Stocks were irregularly higher today. Strength in industrials stemmed primarily from two chemical is sues. Du Pont and Kodak, both of which climbed between 1 and 2 points. Chrysler, which has led the market in the past two ses sions, dropped back 1 but other autos were firm with American and Studebaker active. Steels continued to move ahead paced by Jones & Laughlin and Youngstown with gains of around a point. International oils showed little change. Electronics were firm with Texas Instruments and IBM up around a pair each, and Clevite and Sunbeam ahead over a point. Other issues up at least, a point were Cenco, Richardson-Merrell. Polaroid, Royal Crown Cola and Xerox. Grains CHICAGO (UPD Grain range: 'Greyhound 36 Gulf Oil 42 '. Homestake 50 i Idaho Power 34 ZI.B.M. 417 Int Paper 29 Johns Manville 46 Kennecott Copper 73 Lockheed Aircraft 53 Martin 21 Merck ' 85 Montana Power 38 Montgomery Ward 34 Nat'l Biscuit 47 New York Centra! 18 Northern Natural Gas 48 Northern Pacific 43 Pac Gas Elec 34 Penney J. C. 47 Penn RR 16 Perma Cement 15 Phillips 48 1 Proctor Gamble 74 Radio Corporation 66 RichfieM Oil 43 Safeway 47 Sears 71 Shell Oil 36 Socony Mobil Oil 61 Southern Co. 55 Southern Pacific 30 Spcrry Rand 14 Standard California 64 Standard Indiana 52 Standard N. J. 59 Stokely Van Camp 21 Sun .Mines 9 Texas Co. 61 Texas Gulf Sulfur 14 Texas Pac tand Trust 24 Thiokol 26 Trans America 46 Trans World Air 13 Tri-Cont mental 44 Union Carbide 108 Union Tacific 36 United Aircraft 50 United Air Linos 34 U.S. Plvwond 50 U.S. Rubber 46 U.S. Steel 48 West Bank Cm p Weslinphonse 34 Youngstown 93 Potato Potatoes PORTLAND (UPD - market: Steady; Ore. Russets U.S. No 2 3.40-3.50, some low as 3.25, some best 4.00; sized 2 oz spread 4.50. 4.75; bakers 3.75 4.25; 6-14 oz 3.65-3.90; bakers U.S. No 2 2.75- 3.00, 50 lb ski No 2 2.25-2.65. High Low Close Wheat . Mar 2.07 2.08 2.07 May 2.07 2.06 2.07 Jul 1.93 1.91 1.92- Sep 1.95 1.94 1.94 Oats Mar .72 .72 .72 May .71 .69 .70 Jul .69 .68 .68 Sep .68 MVt .68 Rye Mar 1.33 1.31 1.32 May 1.33 1.31 1.32 Jul 1.29 1.27 1.28 Sep 1.28 1.28 1.28 LOCAL SF.CURIT1KS Prices Until Noon Today Rid Asked Rank of America 62 65 Calif Pac Util 26 28 ("on Frcieht 12 13 Cyprus Mines 22 23 Equitable S V L 33 36 1st Nat l Rank 64 67 .lantzr-n 26 28 Morrison Knuden 3ft 32 Mult Kennels 3 4 N.W. Nat'l Gas 34 36 Orecon Metallurgical 1 1 PP4L 26 27 PGE 27 29 U S. Nat l 76 80 Uniled Utilities 36 38 West Const Tel 21 23 Weyerhaeuser 27 29 Returns Home Lee Holliday, prominent Klam ath Counly rancher and mem her of the board of directors of the Klamath Production Credit As sociation, has returned to his home on the Keno Highway after to weeks in Hillside Hospital. He suffered a heart illness and is now miii-h improved. Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 0 a.m. PST today Affiliated Fund Atomic Fund Blue Ridge Bullock Chemical Fund Comw. Inv. Diver Growth Dreyfus EIH Stock Fidelity Capital Fidelity Trend Fin Inv Fund Founders Fund Fundamental Group Sec Com Gr See Avia El Hamilton H D A. Hamilton C-7 Incorp Inv. ICA Investor's Group Intercontinental Mutual Slock Selective Variahle Keystone B I Keystone S-3 Kevstone S-4 M.I.T. M I T. Growth Nat'l Inv. Nat'l Sec Div Nai l Sec Growth Nai l Sec Stock Putnam und Pulnam Growth Selected Amor Shareholders TV Fund United Accum United Canada United Continental United Income United Science Value Lines Wellington Whitehall Bid Asked 7.78 8.42 461 5.03 11.33 12.38 12.57 13.77 10.SR 11.48 9 60 10.40 8.17 895 15.97 17.36 13.27 14.34 7 93 8.64 12 39 13.47 4.1C 4.56 5.8.1 6.34 9.31 10.20 12.6.1 13.83 6.8"l 7.56 490 501 5.47 6.90 7.54 982 10.73 5 68 6.14 1104 1193 17.78 19.22 10 37 11.09 6 36 688 25.05 26.12 13.76 15.02 401. 4.44 13 97 15.27 7.70 8 42 14 52 15 70 3 93 4 30 7R9 8 62 7.79 8 51 ISO1) 1636 8 33 9.05 10 70 11 69 721 791 13 67 14 94 17 39 18 90 6.62 723 11 89 12 99 6 35 6 94 3 19 5 67 14.19 ' 15.47 13.14 14 21 Story Told Jones Jury Another version of the shooting in which Royal Jones, 37, is al. leged to have wounded his wife, Johnnie Mae. 28. with three bul lets discharged from a .22 cali ber pistol, was presented to the jury in the circuit court of Judge David R. Vandenberg as the trial ended its second day on Wednes-day. Jones, on trial for assault with a dangerous weapon, is charged with wounding his wife twice in the shoulder and again in the head when she refused to let him into their home at 300 Broad Street moments before the shoot ing, last Dec. 18. Statements Jones had made to to the district attorney and the city police on two occasions after the incident were at variance with testimony made previously by Mrs. Jones, it developed court Wednesday. One of Jones' statements was read to the jury by District At torney Dale Crabtree and another was later made known through the testimony of Detective Sergeant Walter Conrady of the Klamath Falls police. The story of the de fendant as he related it to police was that Johnnie Mae attacked him with an ice pick and he had etaiiated in self-defense in shoot ing her with a pistol. The incident occurred as Jones returned to his home after being away for several hours, according to statements the defendant made to law enforcement officials Jones knocked on the front door of his house and was finally let inside after Mrs. Jones first re fused to admit him. Jones said that when Johnnie Mae opened the front door she struck the glass window in the door with an object in her hand. The blow shattered the glass, he said. The defendant went Inside and sat down when Mrs. Jones gave him a box containing his clothing and asked him to leave. It was soon after that Johnnie Mae struck him on the head and the chest with the ice pick, Jones had stat ed. ' In a brief flurry that followed, Jones knocked Johnnie Mae to the floor and shot her with a pistol he removed from his hat. The description of the shoolin; was contradictory to the version offered hy Mrs. Jones during Ihe first day of the trial. Mrs. Jones said she did not ad mil her husband into the house. Instead, he broke the window in the door and fired two shots at her through the broken glass. The two bullets struck her in the shoul der, she had testified. Two of seven state's witnesses summoned to Ihe witness stand Wednesday substantiated part of Mrs. Jones' testimony. Royal Jones Jr., age 7. son of the victim, told the jurv that he observed his father break the win dow in the front door by striking Ihe glass with a gun. Detective Conrady testified later that during his investigation ho found broken pieces of Hie window in the liv ing room, indicating that the glass had wen broken by someone standing on the porch. Other witnesses who testified ere personnel of the Klamath Falls police, including officers R. B. Evans and Charles Evans, Detective Oscar Gerlcve and clerk Bernice Mattcson. Another wimess was Dr. Richard A. Ottoman, the physician ho treated Mrs. Jones (or the bullet wounds she received in the shooting. Dr. Ottoman de scribed the three wounds and re marked on a fourth made by a hullet which passed through the hack of her hand and exited near the end of a finger. In im m " " ' ' k ' " il II ' n if T" -. - lip "'' f ;1 iL Vife, Y if ifymkffi'':-1 U I li Hi :' rl -1 , ... . -lilMlVtnfc "-TTrr J.I. I- u ' ! 1 liVi,'' if' '.'Vmfmmmmm opening of the new Tl t.-t. rAoon hoori Mora And th hashion VI d, Dorn jnown nere. me lupBrmoruBT wa opened unofficially in -mid-December but additional completing work was necessary GRAND OPENING HELD Today marks the official grand Oreaon Food Store and tha Fashion Villa, both shown here. Drior to th formal onanino. Tha Fashion Villa has now bean moved to the new struc ture adjacent to the supermarket and features a complete new stock. Additional ru:- "."' ' l V tTt 1 i' 1 businesses will be added also in the Oregon Food Store complex which is located on Avalon Street between Shasta Way and South Sixth Street. The entire construction program and furnishings cost an estimated $400,000 to $500,000. The building was constructed by Brosterhous Construction Company. Chamber Endorses Deer Resolution (Continued from Page 1) legal decision on the question of whether the Indian still has the right to hunt indiscriminately on former reservation land. 7. Recommends that a study be initiated to develop improved law enforcement of game laws. After the motions had been ap proved by the chamber, Bailey said a notice of the chamber's position along with the seven rec ommendations would be sent to the county's legislative rcprcscn tatives, including Harry Boivin, Carrol Howe, and Geoige Klit-craft. On another subject concerning state government, Floyd Wynne. director of Hie local and state af fairs committee, reported that several proposed bills b-iing stud ied by his group were still "in committee at the state legisla ture." He said his committee would defer making recommenda tions on any of them until they came out of committee. George Callison. manager of the chamber, concluded the meet ing with a report on the Okanogan Caribou Trail Association, which is lobbying for a one-number West Coast highway designation along the Pan American Highway linking Mexico and Alaska. Calli son said the association is en deavoring to have Highway 97 in cluded as part of the internation al road. Two different groups are promoting other highways for the one-number route designation one such route would pass through Toronto. If that course is accepted, the association would press for the designation of a Pan American Highway West, which would extend along the Pacific Coast states and include Highway 97, Callison said. Obituaries SAVE RS RAlph ftArhAll SAyer). 43. ditri Feb 13. Survlvfd by the widow, Mry Savers Klamath Falls; parents, Mr. and Mrs. r. Saytrs. Seattlt; chltdran, Shirley Foutt and Thomas Savers. San Jose, Calif.. Rose Dever, Seattle, Sally Houser, Eugene. Funeral services will be held Friday, Feb. 15. al ItJO p.m. In O Halr-s Memorial Chapel. Interment Klamalh Memorial Park. R. Sayers Funeral Set Funeral services for Ralph Marshall Sayers, 53, will he held Friday, Feb. 15, at 1:30 p.m. in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Rev Robert L. John of First Christian Church will officiate. Final rites and interment will be in Klam ath Memorial Park. He died Feb. 13 in Hillside Hos pital of a heart condition com plicated by pneumonia. Pallbearers will be Sherman Carter, Vaughn Christensen, Har old Douglas, Paul Home, Joseph Phillips and Emery Stockdale. Mr. Sayers. a resident of Klam ath Falls since about 1328, had RANDALL Georqi William Randall, 59, riil hire Fb. 13. 193. Survive-: Wife. Alt, this city; l irtn, Clartnc W.. Marywillfl, Wash., titters, Mrs. Rule SAllert, Dindy, Ore., Mrs. LelA Lee. Beaver ton, Ore., Mrs. Clerenn Freni, Seettle, Mrs. Levelle lerttine. Omsk. Wash., Mrs. Murl Yo- der. Riverside. Wairt. funeral services be held from the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Hrvrte Friday. Feh. 1i. I, . , at j M pm Conciudir- servtces Kimth oecn a DraKcman on ine aouinern wemortei parn. Par f p frnm 1Q."W nnH lva affi SMITH Harnld John Smith. 39. died hern Feh. 13. 1963. Survivors: Mother. Mrs. Bertha Smith, end a brother, Charles J , this city; a sister, Mrs. Mileed Steuber, Prairie City, Ore. Funeral arranoernenls will be announced by Ward's Klemalh Funeral Home. Funerals LAUX Funeral services tor Rose Corpenlno Lauv will tahe place from Ihe chore' ol Ward's Klamaih Funeret Home on FN. day. Feb. U. I'M, at p.m. rnncludlno, servlces, Klamalh Memorial Park. NEWTON Funeril services lor William M New ton, el, will be held Saturday, Feh. le, at 7 p m. In O'Halr'a Memorial Chapel. nlermenl Klamath Memorial Park. alcd with the Switchman's Union of America. He was baptized in the Chris tian Church. He was a native of .Missouri, horn Oct. 19, until. Survivors include the widow, Mary, this city: one Ron, Thom as Sayers of San Jose, Calif.; daughters! Shirley Koust of San .lose, Ros Dever, Seattle, Sally Houser, EuRene: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Sayers. Seattle; six brothers and two sisters; also 12 srandchildren. rr tf.'AjV I. rv-- L . i , 6 v..4 3' -.cg. m r. n i '1 I A 1 v5 OREGON FOOD OFFICIALS These rhree officials head the Oregon Food Store or ganization which today it holding open house in the newest and largest market. Left to right, Joe Fales, president; Ivtrs. Nellie Angstead, secretary-treasurer, and Mor gan Johnson, vice president. Heart Attack Claims Harold Smith Harold James Smith, 59. a resi dent of Klamath Falls since 1921. died Feb. 12, apparently of a heart attack as he was beine taken to Hillside Hospital by Peace Ambulance. He was stricken at the family home, 5240 Altamont Drive. He had been hospitalized for four weeks and had been discharged the morning of his death. He was a native of Rriston, Mont., born July 23. W03, the son of Howard J. and Clara S. Smith. Mr. Smith had been employed at the Monarch Tire Shop on South Sixth Street for 15 years where he had been in charge of the lire recapping service. He served during World War If in the U.S. Air Force and was honorably discharged in April, 1943. Survivors include his stepmoth er, Mrs. Berthe Hi. .1. smitm. a brother, Charles J. Smith, both of this city: and a slepsiter. Mrs. lwis ' Mildred i Stetiher of; Prairie City, Ore. Funeral services w ill be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 16; from Ward's Klamath Funeral Home w ith Rev. Ralph Richardson, First Methodist Church, officiating. Fi nal rites and interment will be in Klamath Memorial Park. Wheat Acreage Increase Asked TULELAKE Ken Baghott, Tulelake farm adviser, and James Stearns, Modoc County supervisor, are in Washington, D.C., in the interest of durum wheat acreages for Tulelake. They seek a renewal of the 40 per cent acreage increase allowed in 19K2 by the U.S. De partment of Agriculture above the E.OOO acre quota of other years. Stearns is a member of the Na tional Durum Advisory Board and of the National Durum Growers Association Board of Directors. ; Durum wheat growing states'. North and South Dakota, Minne sota, and Montana, produced 71, B09.000 bushels of durum in 1962, the largest output in 30 years. First or 50th lend gor geous flowed on your an niversary! Phone Nybock't Flower Fair. W deliver. If engaged in combat, a dove, considered an emblem of peace, will mercilessly peck an oppon ent to death. OFFICE SPACE Lights. hat and wsttr fum iihed. $50.00 monthly. Alk tor Ricky. Phont 4-4161. Willard Hotel WASHINGTON (UPP Textile magnate .Bernard doldfine has agreed to the sale of all his ror porale and personal assets to set tle federal tax claims of several million dollars against him. Ally Gen. Robert F. Kennedy an nounced tod.iy. Goldfine said in a statement Is sued In Boston that he had agreed to settlement of the tax claims because he had neither the strength nor the money to con tinue a court fight. DAILY KLAMATH BASIN SII1PMT.VM Rail Truck Cnmhlnrd Rail Trick Til Oregon M M California II 15 Is F.O.B. i CtROWF-R TRICKS Klamath Basla Demand slow Market dull 100 lb tarka Russet I S No. l. to 14 ni. .1.00 3 ?. few higher flirted 10 lb. sacks . mostly 2.70 le ?.W1 I S No. 2 1. 90-2.00 Net price to growers al cellar bulk ewt: I S No. 1A unwashed and graded 2.0O.S.30 arrordlng In quality rOMBINKD RAIL A TRUCK I'M.OADS Oregon 41 Total All Other Stales il One Week Ago Oregon 32 Total All Other Slate. MS Lincoln Day An appraisal of the mini In. Istralion current pnlirlra will he niHile tonight at the Lin coln Pav Dinner nt the M nrma lintel hy John Pavid I.nIkc, gurst speaker. The meeting Is jointly upon lorrd by the Klamalh County Rrpuhllcan Central Committee, Repuhllran Women of Klam ath County and the V filing Re publican Club. Rcftcrvatlnn may still be made hv phoning the Uinema If 4 41S1. The dinner la sched uled to Rtart promptly al 7 p.m. Do 't Yourself Or W. II Do II For You Rugs Washed & Dved "S4H" Green Stamps BOB'S 5IL SIRVICI LAUNDRY 4 DRY CLEANERS 1711 Mam TU 4-9234 SPECIAL GUEST STAR! IT'S AmRGP.CTimC in THe KLQmQTH courmvl li A " NalF- - L-TV -Mm I NATIONALLY-FAMOUS STARS UUHn AVAILA&LG! FRIDAYS 7:30 to II.30RM. iKtftMflllTQRllim "SKEETS' McDonald 9n (PMAOJtf ' One of Columbia Records' finest singers of "Country" Songs! AUDITORIUM FRIDAY, FEB. 15 BAR-NONE "RANCH PARTY!" Breodcait Direct From Stagt 7:30 By KFLW Exclusively at G ALLEN ((AMP'S MADISON SQUARE Shoes for men with the revolutionary new one-piece molded heel and sole GUARANTEED NEVER TO NEED REPAIRING MADISON SQUARE j'Ifl MAD NARE II moccasin vamp slip-on B &1 rrrll 4-iyelet tie moccasin JI VI In black or brown vamp oiford in black Ijl smooth laalher. Sites j' 1' llt?i or brown smooth li 1 6 to 11, B and D y ij 7aP j leather. Sites 6 to 11, Wi MADISON SQUARE molds an exceptionally long-wearing, non-marking heel and sole directly on to smart, dressy leather uppers, without stitches without nails. The result is a stronger, more durable shoe, yet so light and flexible it doesn't need breaking in. It resists dampness, won't soften or crack. Uniflex heels and soles are guaranteed never to need repairing because they will outwear the uppers or the shoes will be outgrown before they are worn out. What man could ask for more? II OaavMonKaWrtp 711 MAIN ST. Stores Also in Medford and Eugene